Special Report: The Dangers of Teen Driving

Car crashes are the No. 1 killer of teens. It's time to take action.

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PHOTOGRAPHED BY KEVIN IRBY
More than 5,000 teenagers die in car accidents every year.
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SOURCE: NHTSA (2006)
DANGER AFTER DARK: Nearly half of teen crash deaths happen at night.
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SOURCE: IIHS
Crashes per million miles driven in 2006

16: A RISKY AGE
The crash rate for 16-year-olds is nearly double the rate for 19-year-olds.
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Teen Driving Risks
PHOTOGRAPHED BY KEVIN IRBY
More than 5,000 teenagers die in car accidents every year.
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Warning: Teen Drivers

• Kylie Grayden, 17, of Shorewood, Minnesota, glanced at her iPod while driving with her cousin and a friend, both 17. When she veered off the road and flipped her car into a ditch, she and her friend were killed.

• Heading home from practice, Jonathan Chapman, a 16-year-old high school basketball player from La Plata, Maryland, was reportedly speeding when his car rammed an SUV. He and three friends, ages 14 to 16, were killed.

• Five days after graduating from high school, Bailey Goodman, 17, of Fairport, New York, and four classmates were on their way to her family's cottage. Moments after text messages were exchanged on Bailey's cell phone, she slammed into an oncoming truck. All five teens were killed.

More than 5,000 teenagers die in car accidents every year. “If we saw these numbers coming back from a war zone, it would be on the front page every day,” says Vincent Leibell, a state senator from New York, where some 200 teens died in crashes in 2006.

The numbers aren't budging. Fatalities did drop from the mid-'70s through the early '90s, mainly because of tougher seat belt and drunk driving laws. But since then, the statistics have remained stubbornly high, despite improved safety features in cars.

Some of this is due to teens themselves. “Anytime you have immaturity combined with inexperience, you have the potential for disaster,” says Nicole Nason, head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. “And that's what you get with a 16-year-old behind the wheel.”

But that's not the whole story. Speed, distraction, and driver inexperience cause most crashes-and those things can be controlled. “These deaths should not be considered an inevitable part of the teen experience,” says Justin McNaull, director of state relations for AAA. “We can change this.” Here are three steps that will prevent crashes and save countless lives -- of teens and others on the road.

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my problem with tough teen driving laws is how come there are plenty of laws for "protecting teens" but few tought laws for adults? After all, I come from a small town in Oklahoma and I have rarely seen teens drive badly at our local Walmart but have seen plenty of moronic adults drive like maniancs and yet it seems like teens are the only bad drivers in the world. Also I have a big issue with the phrase "teens aren't automatically good drivers at age 16" because they also aren't bad either.

By dabomb62, on 04/20/2009

I lost my 16 year old daughter in a car accident in 2002. She had her license 3 months. She was speeding and not wearing her seatbelt. We were diligent parents, we wore our seatbelts, went the speed limits, talked about how important it was. We didn't know she didn't wear her seatbelt or drove fast when we weren't in the car. We couldn't be with her 24 hours a day. We need tougher laws for teen drivers. Losing a child is the worst, you never get over it. www.mylittlehoneybee.org

By slwendt, on 09/13/2008

I lost my 16 year old daughter in a car accident in 2002. She had her license 3 months. She was speeding and not wearing her seat belt. I was a diligent parent. We wore our seat belts, went the speed limits, talked about it. But I didn't see her out driving without me in the car to know that she liked to speed and not wear her seat belt. It is impossible for a parent to be with their child 24 hours a day. Because of that, we need tougher laws on teen driving. My heart will forever be broken.

By slwendt, on 09/13/2008

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